| Pit Schultz on Mon, 17 Aug 1998 08:21:44 +0200 (MET DST) |
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| <nettime> Open Source Movement |
Hi, is there any nettimer going to this event or knows someone who does?
It would be great to read a little report here, how it went....
anyone complained: "nothing (new) happens under the sun.."? here's a *real
movement* and it started in California (so let's be a bit sceptical ;=B4))
http://www.fsf.org [with Richard Stallman's GNU manifesto...]
http://www.slashdot.org [with a great interface]
http://www.opensource.org/ [with the best business plan]
http://www.mozilla.org/ [and the results?]
http://www.gnu.org [the real ones]
http://www.opencontent.org [adaption from the content front]
http://www.debian.org/ [a free reliable linux]
http://www.freebsd.org/ [a free bsd unix]
http://opensource.oreilly.com/ [those who make money writing the manuals]
http://www.softpanorama.org/ [adaption by the educational community]
http://acm.cs.umn.edu/~jaymz/sigfs/ [and the busines community]
http://home.maine.rr.com/sickthing/osi/ [and another one]
http://msanews.mynet.net/booklet.html [a good basic text by some islamists=]
http://www.oss.net/READER/ [a whole conference around the topic in terms
of info-war]
http://www.zdnet.com:80/anchordesk/story/story_2408.html [the press smells
something hot]
and many more...
so you'll see no copyright by the Oreilly Books, or Netscape, yet...
a little absurd is that Eric Raymond, the evangelist of this
movement, branded 'open source (TM)'... lately
anyway, can we agree that 'open source' is an interesting topic?
let's observe this and continue to post related stuff.
------
[free beer and pizza was announced elsewhere]
Open Source Town Meeting
Friday, August 21, 5-6:30 p.m. at the Fairmont Hotel
in San Jose, California
Attend the
Open Source
Developer Day!
Join us for the Open Source Town Meeting--the first
public gathering of open source community. It's the
grand finale of Open Source Developer Day, and
we'll supply the beer and pizza. Bring yourthirst for
knowledge and suds to the Fairmont Hotel in San
Jose, CA on Friday, August 21 from 5:00-6:30 pm
(doors open at 4:30). If you're a software develo=per,
IS manager, or entrepreneur who wants to find out
about the latest innovations and burning issues i=n open
source development and business models, you've go=t
to be there.
Tim O'Reilly will kick off the Town Meeting by ho=sting
a panel discussion on the topic "Open Source is
Open for Business." Joining Tim will be a panel o=f
open source heavy hitters, including:
Larry Wall, O'Reilly & Associates and creator
of Perl
James Barry, HTTP and WebSphere product
manager, IBM
Jim Hamerly, Vice President, Client Products
Division, Netscape Communications Corp.
David Filo, co-founder of Yahoo
Richard Stallman, founder of the GNU
project
Bob Young, President, Red Hat Software
Brian Behlendorf, C2Net Software and
co-founder, Apache Group
John Ousterhout, CEO, Scriptics Corp. and
creator of the popular Tcl scripting language
Jordan Hubbard, a founder of the FreeBSD
project
Pamela Samuelson, Professor at the
University of California at Berkeley with a j=oint
appointment in the School of Information
Management and Systems and the School of
Law; co-director of the Berkeley Center for
Law and Technology
Eric Raymond, independent developer; open
source evangelist; author of the influential =paper,
"The Cathedral and the Bazaar."
There will be ample time for audience comment and
questions following the panel discussion.
Partners
O'Reilly's partners in the event will have informational
displays on their open source-related efforts. Pa=rtners
include:
ActiveScripting Organization, AbiSource, Inc.,
Apache Group, C2Net Software, Inc., Crynwr,
Cygnus Solutions, Linux International, Linux
Journal, Netscape, Penguin Computing, Red Hat
Software, Inc., Samba, Scriptics Corporation,
Sendmail, Inc., SGI, Silicon Valley Linux Users
Group, Software in the Public Interest, Songline
Studios, SuSE, USENIX, VA Research, Whistle
Communications.
Admission
Admission is just $10. We're donating all proceed=s
from the Open Source Town Meeting to the Free
Software Foundation.
---
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